20.4.18

Ex-Liberian Warlord, Jabbateh Jailed For 30 Years In U.S. For Cooking Human Hearts (Photo)

A former Liberian warlord, Mohammed Jabbateh has been jailed by a court in the United States for 30 years. A U.S. court has sentenced former Liberian warlord known as “Jungle
Jabbah” to 30 years in prison for gaining U.S. asylum by lying and also
ordering the cooking of the hearts of captives and those he killed.

Mohammed Jabbateh, 51, who has lived in East Lansdowne,
Pennsylvania, since the late 1990s, was found guilty in October on two
counts of fraud in immigration documents and two counts of perjury.

He lied about his role in the civil war in his homeland and atrocities he committed, prosecutors said on Friday.

During the height of Liberia’s first civil war from 1992 to 1995,
Jabbateh, while serving as commander of a warring group, either
personally committed or ordered acts such as rapes, ritual cannibalism,
mutilation, murder and the use of child soldiers, according to
prosecutors.

An attorney for Jabbateh, Greg Pagano of Philadelphia, did not immediately respond to a request for comment.

Prosecutors said while applying for asylum in December 1998,
Jabbateh was not truthful about his membership in the group known as the
United Liberation Movement of Liberia for Democracy (ULIMO), and later
ULIMO-K, rebel groups that battled for control of Liberia.

Two dozen witnesses, including 17 Liberian victims, testified in the trial.

According to testimony, in one instance, Jabbateh ordered that the
heart of a captive be cooked and fed to his fighters. In another,
fighters under his command murdered a villager, removed his heart and
ordered the town chief’s wife to cook it.

Jabbateh later had the town chief himself murdered and ordered his widow to cook her husband’s heart.

During Jabbateh’s trial Pagano said Jabbateh had been framed by
accusers who were desperate to blame anyone they could for atrocities
committed during the civil war.

“These are tall tales of enemies settling old scores – not
because they had personal experiences with him but because of what group
he’s identified with,” Pagano said at the trial, according to a posting on his website.

“There is no greater motive than revenge.”

The case was investigated by special agents of Homeland Security
Investigations, an arm of the U.S. Department of Homeland Security.